Peter Taylor - A Life in Business

Part 1 - Early Days

By Sue Horncastle

Peter was born in 1930 and grew up in an area behind Rayleigh Station marked out in plots to be developed. The areas in red on the map were for housing and those in blue were allotments. Peter went to Love Lane school at the bottom of the map by the yellow route crossing cowfields.

He was part of a large family of two girls, Joan and Kathleen, a brother Cyril and a younger brother David. The house, called Crofton, was one of only a few which were actually built when Peter was a lad. There was running cold water but no gas or electricity and hot water had to be boiled in a copper. The tin bath was brought in from the garden once a week, placed in front of the fire and the family took turns to use it. Food was cooked on a coal fire with an oven at the side and the house was lit with paraffin lamps and candles. Later on gas and electricity were installed; Peter's mother even had a gas iron and gas refrigerator. Peter says that really changed their lives, even though they still went to bed by candlelight.

During the war Peter's older sister Joan was engaged to be married. Her fiance was a paratrooper so, as it was impossible to save enough clothing coupons to buy a wedding dress, he brought back a silk parachute from his base. Mrs Taylor was a dressmaker and she made a lovely dress from the parachute material which Peter has to this day. (audio clip 1 "Wedding Dress")

Mr Taylor worked in London and travelled there by train everyday except Sundays. There was not much money but he grew vegetables on his allotments to feed the growing family. Their mother kept goats for milk and a variety of poultry for food which were allowed to run loose on the undeveloped plotland. Chicks were bought 300 at a time for a penny each from Rayleigh market. They were carefully reared and after about eight weeks were let loose.

Every Saturday Mrs Taylor prepared a special dinner for the family and afterwards they listened to band music on a battery powered radio. Peter developed a love of band music then which has stayed with him ever since. (audio clip 2 "Chicken Dinner")

Peter left school at the age of 14. He was dyslexic, a condition which was not recognised in those days. He had difficulty with school work and had rarely attended for the last two years. However, Peter was good with animals and could do anything with his hands. Many people kept livestock during the war in order to supplement their diets. If they had enough space some people kept a pig but it was almost impossible to buy pig food. Being of an enterprising nature, young Peter got hold of a donkey and cart and made a contract with Love Lane school to collect all the leftovers from the school dinners every day. He then sold and distributed the waste as pig food. This was his first business. After a while Peter bought himself a piglet. He reared it and it had young.

Eventually Peter had about 100 pigs living on an acre of scrubland he had fenced off with electric wire. When they were grown the pigs were sold for bacon to the Dunmow Fitch Co. which collected six at a time. At 16 years old Peter opened his first bank account with Barclays in which he deposited his pig money savings of £400 - £600. He kept his earning quiet from the rest of the family! (audio clip 3 "Pig Enterprise)

As well as keeping pigs Peter worked on farms locally driving tractors from the age of 12. Later, a neighbour started a farmwork contract business; Peter worked for him ploughing in winter and cutting and bringing in hay and silage in summer. He bought a big steam boiler to cook and sterilize the pig food before he left for work at six each morning.

After the war there was a huge demand for housing and the some of the plotlands were developed for council houses. Peter's sister and her family came back to live at Crofton so his parents bought a little bungalow nearby. Peter still had to live at home to take care of the pigs. Still only in his teens, he saw another opportunity to make money. He spent £150 on a 12 hp Howard Gem rotary hoe which he took round the area offering to dig gardens and allotments. One Sunday he came home with £100 in cash earned at the new Broadlands estate at Hockley.

Life wasn't all work for the young man; most Saturdays he would go on the “City bus” to the cinema in Southend and often on to the Glider Room roller skating rink. One week a young lady sat next to him in the cinema, they chatted in the interval and when the film ended they walked to the bus stop together. Wendy came from a large family who lived in Southchurch. She had just matriculated from college at Southend and was about to start her first job. When Peter's bus came, Wendy kissed him: she was nearly 16 and he was 19. This was the start of their romance.

Peter says by that time he was getting fed up with his donkey cart so he bought a van. Every night on her way home from work at a solicitor's office in London, Wendy would get off the train at Rayleigh and walk to Crofton. Peter would take her home later in his van as, he says with a laugh, “We could have a little cuddle.” Later, the trusty van took the young couple to Butlins at Clacton for a holiday. Peter was still working on farms and keeping pigs as well when he saw an advertisement in the Southend Standard for an acre of land for sale at Hockley. It cost £200 and using some of his savings, he bought it. Peter and Wendy were married when he was 21 and Wendy was 19 years old. Peter still lives in the bungalow he built on his acre of land at Hockley so many years ago. (audio clip 4 "Land Purchase")

(From a conversation between Peter Taylor and Sue Horncastle, May 2016)

I consent to my name and e-mail address being stored along with this comment, and to the website editors communicating with me by e-mail about the comment if necessary. My name may be published alongside the comment on the website, but my e-mail address will not be published. My information will not be shared with any third party (see our privacy statement).